European rugby chiefs insist there remains “real warmth” towards a Club World Cup but concede the new competition would not launch until 2028 at the earliest.
Dominic McKay, chairman of the European Professional Club Rugby, which organises the Champions and Challenge Cups, revealed that there is a strong appetite in both hemispheres to establish a Club World Cup which he believes would also attract considerable interest from broadcasters.
“There’s a warmth on trying to identify once and for all who is the greatest club in the world, I think that’s the mantle a lot of European and South African clubs like the challenge of, trying to settle that argument,” McKay said. “There’s a real warmth to develop a World Club Cup and a number of the clubs from France and the UK were pushing this quite hard.
“The one thing I would say is there is a real warmth behind this project in a way that rugby’s got lots of great projects that never quite see the light of day. This one has got one warmth from both the northern hemisphere and the Southern Hemisphere and I’m very pleased about that.”
The current working model would be for eight clubs, which would include the South African franchises from the United Rugby Championship, to qualify from the Champions Cup pool stages, who would then face eight clubs from the southern hemisphere in a straight knockout competition contested over four weekends.